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Mission Statement and Objectives:

Formed by leading critical care specialists in March 2020, at the beginning of the Coronavirus pandemic, the ‘Front Line COVID-19 Critical Care Alliance’ is now a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization dedicated to developing highly effective treatment protocols to prevent the transmission of COVID-19 and to improve the outcomes for patients ill with the disease.

We are dedicated to:

Reviewing all emerging published medical literature on COVID-19 from in-vitro, animal, clinical, and epidemiologic studies. Developing effective treatment protocols for COVID-19 that evolve by incorporating newly identified, applicable therapeutic and pathophysiologic insights.

Educating physicians on safe and effective treatment approaches to all phases of COVID-19, from disease prevention strategies to the use of our combination-based therapy protocols in both early-stage (I-MASK+) and hospitalized patients (MATH+).

Improving outcomes for people impacted by COVID-19 disorders through preventive and treatment strate­gies designed to optimize health.

Teaching the public ways to prevent transmission of the virus and to advocate for the best possible care.

Coordinating and accelerating the formation of research studies that will support effective prevention and therapeutic treatments for all impacted by COVID-19.

We accomplish these goals by sponsoring high quality medical education for both the public and health care providers, via the publication of scientific manuscripts, media interviews, and medical lectures for medical providers and the public.

Our funding needs are:

To conduct a public awareness campaign to promote disease prevention and early treatment by hiring media and public relations professionals to engage and optimize the use of radio, print, television, and social media to gain awareness of, and interest in, our medical insights and effective treatment protocols, in particular the recently proven prophylaxis and early treatment protocol called I-MASK+.

To fund website design professionals to keep our internet presence and information portals current, up-to-date, user friendly, and informative with the latest medical information and treatment recommendations.

To support staff able to lobby government and other major healthcare agencies with the aim of both having those agencies validate the evidence in support of our identified therapies and consequently adopt them on a large scale, ideally forming a new standard of care for COVID-19.

Mission Statement and Objectives: Formed by leading critical care specialists in March 2020, at the beginning of the Coronavirus pandemic, the ‘Front Line COVID-19 Critical Care Alliance’ is now a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization dedicated to developing highly effective treatment protocols to prevent the transmission of COVID-19 and to improve the outcomes for patients ill with the disease. We are dedicated to: Reviewing all emerging published medical literature on COVID-19 from in-vitro, animal, clinical, and epidemiologic studies. Developing effective treatment protocols for COVID-19 that evolve by incorporating newly identified, applicable therapeutic and pathophysiologic insights. Educating physicians on safe and effective treatment approaches to all phases of COVID-19, from disease prevention strategies to the use of our combination-based therapy protocols in both early-stage (I-MASK+) and hospitalized patients (MATH+). Improving outcomes for people impacted by COVID-19 disorders through preventive and treatment strate­gies designed to optimize health. Teaching the public ways to prevent transmission of the virus and to advocate for the best possible care. Coordinating and accelerating the formation of research studies that will support effective prevention and therapeutic treatments for all impacted by COVID-19. We accomplish these goals by sponsoring high quality medical education for both the public and health care providers, via the publication of scientific manuscripts, media interviews, and medical lectures for medical providers and the public. Our funding needs are: To conduct a public awareness campaign to promote disease prevention and early treatment by hiring media and public relations professionals to engage and optimize the use of radio, print, television, and social media to gain awareness of, and interest in, our medical insights and effective treatment protocols, in particular the recently proven prophylaxis and early treatment protocol called I-MASK+. To fund website design professionals to keep our internet presence and information portals current, up-to-date, user friendly, and informative with the latest medical information and treatment recommendations. To support staff able to lobby government and other major healthcare agencies with the aim of both having those agencies validate the evidence in support of our identified therapies and consequently adopt them on a large scale, ideally forming a new standard of care for COVID-19.

(post is archived)

[–] 0 pt (edited )

Damn I took a Valium for a pinched nerve let me fix that post.

Working on an 80yo now. Was exhausted after about for about 4-5 hours 3-4 day until second set of pills at 12 hours.

I kept the 2 doses the same but threw at least one of every natural supplement/antioxidants/anti inflammatories(all supplements) besides a few extra Pepcid today to a third dose at 8 hours and she only crashed for about an hour instead of 4 or 5 and didn’t get super congested.

5 days in today. 104.2 fever and 83 oxygen level, 8-12 hours late from hcq and supplements the fever was gone and oxygen level was 95, a few hours later at 97 now it’s 97-99.

I did Hcq 400mg and massive supplements in the beginning, then did everything again at 6 hours and had my girlfriend watch her while I went 4 hours to get the only ivermectin around. I’ve kept her on both hcq 400mg and ivermectin but 12 hours apart.

Not sure if you’re supposed to take both but I don’t want to stop either one.

Follow this advice for even cancer etc. not one treatment at a time.

We all were struck by the amount of treatment that Dr. Simon explains with his military background: “once you decided to attack your enemy, do it strong and completely”.

http://www.retzek.info/ivermectin-also-great-antiviral-drug-useful-even-against-coronavirus/

[–] 0 pt

I understand that large doses of Vitamin D3 help in the beginning especially with our older folks.

[–] 0 pt (edited )

This is from poal a few months ago:

I believe it helps everyone, just like most things, the sooner the better.

A high-dose (250,000 or 500,000 IU) vitamin D3 trial in ventilated intensive care unit patients in Georgia with mean a baseline 25(OH)D concentration of 20–22 ng/mL reported that hospital length of stay was reduced from 36 days in the control group to 25 days in the 250,000-IU group and 18 days in the 500,000-IU group. In a follow-on pilot trial involving 30 mechanically ventilated critically ill patients, 500,000 IU of vitamin D3 supplementation significantly increased hemoglobin concentrations and lowered hepcidin concentrations, improving iron metabolism and the blood’s ability to transport oxygen

This is from H1N1:

Stock your home's pharmacy with several fresh bottles of 50,000 IU capsules of Vitamin D3 (a medicine a this dosage, not a supplement) and if you get this flu, take 2,000 IU per kg of body weight per day for a week. As I weigh 220 pounds, I would take 200,000 IU per day for seven days if I thought I had an infection with a 1918-like influenza virus.

That shit was expensive back then and only 1 company made it, that I could find. It’s now on Amazon for a fraction of the price. It’s powdered capsules so it must be taken with oil or you can just buy the carlsons 10,000iu (more expensive in the long run) but they’re already in oil and ready to take.

You’re supposed to round up, not down to the nearest 50,000iu.

Everything she took I believe contributed to such a fast recovery, from deaths door, not it’s just healing time, full of energy but can’t over do it.

80 and it’s the most severe I’ve ever seen her sick and the fastest recovery I’ve ever seen anyone make. 8 hours to feeling better, she doesn’t remember the day before or that day though because of the fever and still being somewhat out of it the first day.

[–] 0 pt

Thanks for the thoughtful reply. Great info.